1.Evidence-based clinical practice guideline for bone cement-augmented pedicle screw technique (version 2025)
Sihao HE ; Junchao XING ; Tongwei CHU ; Zhengqi CHANG ; Xigao CHENG ; Fei DAI ; Xiaobing JIANG ; Jie HAO ; Jiang HU ; Jinghui HUANG ; Tianyong HOU ; Fei LUO ; Bo LIAO ; Changqing LI ; Lei LIU ; Guodong LIU ; Peng LIU ; Sheng LU ; Weishi LI ; Yang LIU ; Zhen LIU ; Wei MEI ; Peifu TANG ; Bing WANG ; Bing WANG ; Ce WANG ; Hongli WANG ; Liang WANG ; Shengru WANG ; Xiaobin WANG ; Yang WANG ; Yingfeng WANG ; Zheng WANG ; Jianzhong XU ; Guoyong YIN ; Haiyang YU ; Qiang YANG ; Zhaoming YE ; Bin ZHANG ; Chengmin ZHANG ; Jun ZOU ; Qiang ZHOU ; Min ZHAO ; Rui ZHOU ; Xiaojun ZHANG ; Yongfei ZHAO ; Zhongrong ZHANG ; Zehua ZHANG ; Yingze ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Trauma 2025;41(11):1035-1047
For middle-aged and elderly patients with conditions such as spinal fractures and degenerative spinal diseases, spinal internal fixation is a core surgical procedure for reconstructing spinal stability, heavily relying on the biomechanical stability provided by pedicle screw systems. Whereas, these patients are often complicated by osteoporosis that can significantly compromise the stability of the bone-pedicle screw interface, leading to a marked increase in pedicle screw loosening and surgical failure rates. The bone cement-augmented pedicle screw technique, which involves injecting bone cement into the vertebral body or screw trajectory to optimize the mechanical properties of the bone-pedicle screw composite, has been proven to significantly enhance fixation strength and effectively prevent screw-related failures, thereby reducing the incidence of internal fixation failure in high-risk populations undergoing spinal fusion. However, the widespread clinical application of this technique has faced challenges such as inaccurate clinical decision-making (indication and contraindication selection), non-standardized operative practices, and insufficient awareness of complication prevention, resulting in considerable variability in clinical outcomes and even severe complications. To address this, Prof. Luo Fei from First Affiliated Hospital of Army Medical University initiated the project and the Chinese Association Orthopaedic Surgeons organized relevant experts to develop the Evidence-based clinical practice guideline for bone cement-augmented pedicle screw technique ( version 2025), based on current evidence. The guidelines put forward 8 recommendations regarding the clinical value, scope of application, and operational standards of the technique, aiming to provide evidence-based medical support and technical standardization for clinical decision-making.
2.The impact of femoral resection on the prognosis of patients with soft tissue sarcoma of the thigh involving cortical bone
Hao QU ; Keyi WANG ; Haochen MU ; Yaling JIANG ; Jiahao ZHANG ; Xin HUANG ; Nong LIN ; Zhaoming YE
Chinese Journal of Orthopaedics 2025;45(10):630-639
Objective:To investigate the prognostic effect of femoral resection on patients with soft tissue sarcoma of the thigh with cortical bone involvement.Methods:This retrospective study included patients with soft tissue sarcoma of the thigh diagnosed and treated in the Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine from January 2014 to December 2021. Patients were divided into two groups based on whether femoral resection and reconstruction were performed with 20 in the resection group and 86 in the non-resection group. Propensity score matching (PSM) was used to control confounding variables. Overall Survival, recurrence free survival, metastasis free survival, and postoperative functional outcomes were compared between groups before and after PSM. Cox proportional hazards regression was used to identify risk factors for death, recurrence, and metastasis.Results:Before PSM, the 5-year overall survival (OS) and recurrence-free survival (RFS) rates were 46.7% and 36.7% in the resection group, compared to 69.7% and 60.3% in the non-resection group without significant differences ( P>0.05). However, the 5-year metastasis-free survival (MFS) rate was significantly lower in the resection group (40.0%) compared to the non-resection group (73.1%) ( P=0.021). After PSM, the 5-year OS, RFS, and MFS in the resection group were 46.7%, 36.7%, and 35.9%, respectively, compared to 45.0%, 39.4%, and 67.7% in the non-resection group, with no significant differences ( P>0.05). The median postoperative MSTS functional score after PSM was significantly lower in the resection group 23(18, 25) points than in the non-resection group 26.5(24.3, 27.8) points ( U=43.000, P=0.007). Multivariate Cox regression analysis identified grade III histology ( HR=3.794, P=0.002) and tumor involvement angle around the femur greater than 180° ( HR=2.729, P=0.030) as independent risk factors for death. Age over 55 years ( HR=4.185, P=0.015), tumor diameter greater than 8 cm ( HR=4.290, P=0.014), and involvement of the intermuscular compartment ( HR=3.794, P=0.017) were associated with increased risk of local recurrence. Grade III histology ( HR=3.848, P=0.006) and involvement of the intermuscular compartment ( HR=2.500, P=0.045) were associated with distant metastasis. Conclusion:For patients with thigh soft tissue sarcoma involving femoral cortex involvement but no medullary cavity invasion, bone resection did not improve survival, recurrence or metastasis compared with patients in non-resection group. A relatively more conservative surgical approach may be advisable to preserve limb function without compromising oncological prognosis.
3.The influence of age and gender on the sagittal spine-pelvis parameters during the natural aging process of healthy adults
Hui YE ; Qiongjie CHEN ; Wangyi PAN ; Junnan CHEN ; Xingyan HE ; Zhaoming YE ; Ning ZHANG ; Zhiwei WANG ; Dengwei HE ; Kejun ZHU
Chinese Journal of Orthopaedics 2025;45(18):1193-1200
Objective:To explore the effects of age and gender on the sagittal spinal-pelvic parameters during the natural aging process of healthy adults.Methods:A total of 647 Chinese healthy adults who underwent health check-ups at the Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine and Songyang County People's Hospital, from January 2017 to September 2024 were collected. There were 277 males and 370 females, aged 18-93 years. Anteroposterior and lateral X-ray films of the whole spine were taken to evaluate the spinal-pelvic sagittal morphology. The following parameters were measured: thoracic kyphosis (TK), lumbar lordosis(LL), sacral slope (SS), pelvic incidence (PI), pelvic tilt (PT), global tilt (GT), T 1-pelvic angle (TPA), sagittal vertical axis (SVA), thoracic Cobb angle (T-Cobb), lower end vertebra of thoracic Cobb angle (T-LEV), apex vertebra of thoracic Cobb angle (T-Apex), lumbar Cobb angle (L-Cobb). Compare the differences in spine-pelvis parameters among patients of different genders and age groups (in this study, the subjects were subdivided into the 18-29, 30-39, 40-49, 50-59, 60-69, 70-79, and 80-93 years groups according to the age range). Results:The results showed that GT, SVA, TPA, and PT increased with age ( P<0.05). For males aged 18-29, 30-39, 40-49, 50-59, 60-69, 70-79, and 80-93 years, PT values were 8.58°±6.47°, 9.60°±5.63°, 12.65°±7.13°, 11.00°±6.99°, 13.01°±8.63°, 15.77°±8.02°, and 18.47°±10.03° respectively; for females in the same age groups, the PT values were 8.44°±6.83°, 9.00°±6.44°, 11.84°±7.35°, 12.07°±7.51°, 15.44°±9.39°, 19.26°±8.28°, and 18.17°±9.43° respectively. For males in these age groups, the global tilt (GT) values were 6.37°±7.20°, 8.77°±6.51°, 10.38°±9.07°, 8.80°±7.49°, 10.80°±8.62°, 16.07°±10.42°, and 21.99°±12.65° respectively; for females, the GT values were 4.46°±8.09°, 5.96°±7.83°, 8.17°±6.88°, 9.41°±8.03°, 9.96°±1.39°, 17.89°±9.39°, and 19.55°±12.34° respectively. The sagittal vertical axis (SVA) values for males in the age groups were -7.94±25.57 mm, -2.98±25.69 mm, -4.63±20.90 mm, -6.43±32.81 mm, 7.85±43.39 mm, 36.49±53.89 mm, and 55.57±51.10 mm respectively; for females, they were -24.12±31.35 mm, -17.49±25.12 mm, -17.88±22.72 mm, -8.25±30.91 mm, 8.80±27.45 mm, 28.67±38.22 mm, and 23.23±35.19 mm respectively. For males, the thoracic pelvic angle (TPA) values across the age groups were 4.46°±5.94°, 6.05°±5.38°, 9.58°±9.35°, 7.52°±7.64°, 11.23°±9.59°, 16.32°±12.38°, and 18.49°±11.70° respectively; for females, the TPA values were 2.72°±6.88°, 3.68°±6.26°, 7.30°±6.11°, 7.44°±6.75°, 12.64°±9.79°, 19.08°±10.39°, and 16.79°±13.19° respectively. T-Cobb, T-LEV, and T-Apex increased slowly with age ( P<0.05). The pelvic incidence (PI) remained relatively constant in males ( P>0.05), while it increased slowly with age in females ( P<0.05). Conclusions:Sagittal anteversion of the spinal-pelvis increases with age. Gender differences are reflected in specific changes in the fluctuation amplitude of certain parameters (such as PI), and the fluctuations of indicators like T-Cobb, T-LEV, and T-Apex are closely related to the natural aging process of the spine.
4.The impact of femoral resection on the prognosis of patients with soft tissue sarcoma of the thigh involving cortical bone
Hao QU ; Keyi WANG ; Haochen MU ; Yaling JIANG ; Jiahao ZHANG ; Xin HUANG ; Nong LIN ; Zhaoming YE
Chinese Journal of Orthopaedics 2025;45(10):630-639
Objective:To investigate the prognostic effect of femoral resection on patients with soft tissue sarcoma of the thigh with cortical bone involvement.Methods:This retrospective study included patients with soft tissue sarcoma of the thigh diagnosed and treated in the Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine from January 2014 to December 2021. Patients were divided into two groups based on whether femoral resection and reconstruction were performed with 20 in the resection group and 86 in the non-resection group. Propensity score matching (PSM) was used to control confounding variables. Overall Survival, recurrence free survival, metastasis free survival, and postoperative functional outcomes were compared between groups before and after PSM. Cox proportional hazards regression was used to identify risk factors for death, recurrence, and metastasis.Results:Before PSM, the 5-year overall survival (OS) and recurrence-free survival (RFS) rates were 46.7% and 36.7% in the resection group, compared to 69.7% and 60.3% in the non-resection group without significant differences ( P>0.05). However, the 5-year metastasis-free survival (MFS) rate was significantly lower in the resection group (40.0%) compared to the non-resection group (73.1%) ( P=0.021). After PSM, the 5-year OS, RFS, and MFS in the resection group were 46.7%, 36.7%, and 35.9%, respectively, compared to 45.0%, 39.4%, and 67.7% in the non-resection group, with no significant differences ( P>0.05). The median postoperative MSTS functional score after PSM was significantly lower in the resection group 23(18, 25) points than in the non-resection group 26.5(24.3, 27.8) points ( U=43.000, P=0.007). Multivariate Cox regression analysis identified grade III histology ( HR=3.794, P=0.002) and tumor involvement angle around the femur greater than 180° ( HR=2.729, P=0.030) as independent risk factors for death. Age over 55 years ( HR=4.185, P=0.015), tumor diameter greater than 8 cm ( HR=4.290, P=0.014), and involvement of the intermuscular compartment ( HR=3.794, P=0.017) were associated with increased risk of local recurrence. Grade III histology ( HR=3.848, P=0.006) and involvement of the intermuscular compartment ( HR=2.500, P=0.045) were associated with distant metastasis. Conclusion:For patients with thigh soft tissue sarcoma involving femoral cortex involvement but no medullary cavity invasion, bone resection did not improve survival, recurrence or metastasis compared with patients in non-resection group. A relatively more conservative surgical approach may be advisable to preserve limb function without compromising oncological prognosis.
5.The influence of age and gender on the sagittal spine-pelvis parameters during the natural aging process of healthy adults
Hui YE ; Qiongjie CHEN ; Wangyi PAN ; Junnan CHEN ; Xingyan HE ; Zhaoming YE ; Ning ZHANG ; Zhiwei WANG ; Dengwei HE ; Kejun ZHU
Chinese Journal of Orthopaedics 2025;45(18):1193-1200
Objective:To explore the effects of age and gender on the sagittal spinal-pelvic parameters during the natural aging process of healthy adults.Methods:A total of 647 Chinese healthy adults who underwent health check-ups at the Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine and Songyang County People's Hospital, from January 2017 to September 2024 were collected. There were 277 males and 370 females, aged 18-93 years. Anteroposterior and lateral X-ray films of the whole spine were taken to evaluate the spinal-pelvic sagittal morphology. The following parameters were measured: thoracic kyphosis (TK), lumbar lordosis(LL), sacral slope (SS), pelvic incidence (PI), pelvic tilt (PT), global tilt (GT), T 1-pelvic angle (TPA), sagittal vertical axis (SVA), thoracic Cobb angle (T-Cobb), lower end vertebra of thoracic Cobb angle (T-LEV), apex vertebra of thoracic Cobb angle (T-Apex), lumbar Cobb angle (L-Cobb). Compare the differences in spine-pelvis parameters among patients of different genders and age groups (in this study, the subjects were subdivided into the 18-29, 30-39, 40-49, 50-59, 60-69, 70-79, and 80-93 years groups according to the age range). Results:The results showed that GT, SVA, TPA, and PT increased with age ( P<0.05). For males aged 18-29, 30-39, 40-49, 50-59, 60-69, 70-79, and 80-93 years, PT values were 8.58°±6.47°, 9.60°±5.63°, 12.65°±7.13°, 11.00°±6.99°, 13.01°±8.63°, 15.77°±8.02°, and 18.47°±10.03° respectively; for females in the same age groups, the PT values were 8.44°±6.83°, 9.00°±6.44°, 11.84°±7.35°, 12.07°±7.51°, 15.44°±9.39°, 19.26°±8.28°, and 18.17°±9.43° respectively. For males in these age groups, the global tilt (GT) values were 6.37°±7.20°, 8.77°±6.51°, 10.38°±9.07°, 8.80°±7.49°, 10.80°±8.62°, 16.07°±10.42°, and 21.99°±12.65° respectively; for females, the GT values were 4.46°±8.09°, 5.96°±7.83°, 8.17°±6.88°, 9.41°±8.03°, 9.96°±1.39°, 17.89°±9.39°, and 19.55°±12.34° respectively. The sagittal vertical axis (SVA) values for males in the age groups were -7.94±25.57 mm, -2.98±25.69 mm, -4.63±20.90 mm, -6.43±32.81 mm, 7.85±43.39 mm, 36.49±53.89 mm, and 55.57±51.10 mm respectively; for females, they were -24.12±31.35 mm, -17.49±25.12 mm, -17.88±22.72 mm, -8.25±30.91 mm, 8.80±27.45 mm, 28.67±38.22 mm, and 23.23±35.19 mm respectively. For males, the thoracic pelvic angle (TPA) values across the age groups were 4.46°±5.94°, 6.05°±5.38°, 9.58°±9.35°, 7.52°±7.64°, 11.23°±9.59°, 16.32°±12.38°, and 18.49°±11.70° respectively; for females, the TPA values were 2.72°±6.88°, 3.68°±6.26°, 7.30°±6.11°, 7.44°±6.75°, 12.64°±9.79°, 19.08°±10.39°, and 16.79°±13.19° respectively. T-Cobb, T-LEV, and T-Apex increased slowly with age ( P<0.05). The pelvic incidence (PI) remained relatively constant in males ( P>0.05), while it increased slowly with age in females ( P<0.05). Conclusions:Sagittal anteversion of the spinal-pelvis increases with age. Gender differences are reflected in specific changes in the fluctuation amplitude of certain parameters (such as PI), and the fluctuations of indicators like T-Cobb, T-LEV, and T-Apex are closely related to the natural aging process of the spine.
6.Evidence-based clinical practice guideline for bone cement-augmented pedicle screw technique (version 2025)
Sihao HE ; Junchao XING ; Tongwei CHU ; Zhengqi CHANG ; Xigao CHENG ; Fei DAI ; Xiaobing JIANG ; Jie HAO ; Jiang HU ; Jinghui HUANG ; Tianyong HOU ; Fei LUO ; Bo LIAO ; Changqing LI ; Lei LIU ; Guodong LIU ; Peng LIU ; Sheng LU ; Weishi LI ; Yang LIU ; Zhen LIU ; Wei MEI ; Peifu TANG ; Bing WANG ; Bing WANG ; Ce WANG ; Hongli WANG ; Liang WANG ; Shengru WANG ; Xiaobin WANG ; Yang WANG ; Yingfeng WANG ; Zheng WANG ; Jianzhong XU ; Guoyong YIN ; Haiyang YU ; Qiang YANG ; Zhaoming YE ; Bin ZHANG ; Chengmin ZHANG ; Jun ZOU ; Qiang ZHOU ; Min ZHAO ; Rui ZHOU ; Xiaojun ZHANG ; Yongfei ZHAO ; Zhongrong ZHANG ; Zehua ZHANG ; Yingze ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Trauma 2025;41(11):1035-1047
For middle-aged and elderly patients with conditions such as spinal fractures and degenerative spinal diseases, spinal internal fixation is a core surgical procedure for reconstructing spinal stability, heavily relying on the biomechanical stability provided by pedicle screw systems. Whereas, these patients are often complicated by osteoporosis that can significantly compromise the stability of the bone-pedicle screw interface, leading to a marked increase in pedicle screw loosening and surgical failure rates. The bone cement-augmented pedicle screw technique, which involves injecting bone cement into the vertebral body or screw trajectory to optimize the mechanical properties of the bone-pedicle screw composite, has been proven to significantly enhance fixation strength and effectively prevent screw-related failures, thereby reducing the incidence of internal fixation failure in high-risk populations undergoing spinal fusion. However, the widespread clinical application of this technique has faced challenges such as inaccurate clinical decision-making (indication and contraindication selection), non-standardized operative practices, and insufficient awareness of complication prevention, resulting in considerable variability in clinical outcomes and even severe complications. To address this, Prof. Luo Fei from First Affiliated Hospital of Army Medical University initiated the project and the Chinese Association Orthopaedic Surgeons organized relevant experts to develop the Evidence-based clinical practice guideline for bone cement-augmented pedicle screw technique ( version 2025), based on current evidence. The guidelines put forward 8 recommendations regarding the clinical value, scope of application, and operational standards of the technique, aiming to provide evidence-based medical support and technical standardization for clinical decision-making.
7.Clinical guidelines for the treatment of ankylosing spondylitis combined with lower cervical fracture in adults (version 2024)
Qingde WANG ; Yuan HE ; Bohua CHEN ; Tongwei CHU ; Jinpeng DU ; Jian DONG ; Haoyu FENG ; Shunwu FAN ; Shiqing FENG ; Yanzheng GAO ; Zhong GUAN ; Hua GUO ; Yong HAI ; Lijun HE ; Dianming JIANG ; Jianyuan JIANG ; Bin LIN ; Bin LIU ; Baoge LIU ; Chunde LI ; Fang LI ; Feng LI ; Guohua LYU ; Li LI ; Qi LIAO ; Weishi LI ; Xiaoguang LIU ; Hongjian LIU ; Yong LIU ; Zhongjun LIU ; Shibao LU ; Yong QIU ; Limin RONG ; Yong SHEN ; Huiyong SHEN ; Jun SHU ; Yueming SONG ; Tiansheng SUN ; Yan WANG ; Zhe WANG ; Zheng WANG ; Hong XIA ; Guoyong YIN ; Jinglong YAN ; Wen YUAN ; Zhaoming YE ; Jie ZHAO ; Jianguo ZHANG ; Yue ZHU ; Yingjie ZHOU ; Zhongmin ZHANG ; Wei MEI ; Dingjun HAO ; Baorong HE
Chinese Journal of Trauma 2024;40(2):97-106
Ankylosing spondylitis (AS) combined with lower cervical fracture is often categorized into unstable fracture, with a high incidence of neurological injury and a high rate of disability and morbidity. As factors such as shoulder occlusion may affect the accuracy of X-ray imaging diagnosis, it is often easily misdiagnosed at the primary diagnosis. Non-operative treatment has complications such as bone nonunion and the possibility of secondary neurological damage, while the timing, access and choice of surgical treatment are still controversial. Currently, there are no clinical practice guidelines for the treatment of AS combined with lower cervical fracture with or without dislocation. To this end, the Spinal Trauma Group of Orthopedics Branch of Chinese Medical Doctor Association organized experts to formulate Clinical guidelines for the treatment of ankylosing spondylitis combined with lower cervical fracture in adults ( version 2024) in accordance with the principles of evidence-based medicine, scientificity and practicality, in which 11 recommendations were put forward in terms of the diagnosis, imaging evaluation, typing and treatment, etc, to provide guidance for the diagnosis and treatment of AS combined with lower cervical fracture.
8.Analysis of risk factors of pleural effusion after spinal separation
Keyi WANG ; Hao QU ; Wen WANG ; Zhaonong YAO ; Xiaowei ZHOU ; Yuhong YAO ; Hengyuan LI ; Peng LIN ; Xiumao LI ; Xiaobo YAN ; Meng LIU ; Xin HUANG ; Nong LIN ; Zhaoming YE
Chinese Journal of Orthopaedics 2024;44(3):169-176
Objective:To investigate the risk factors of pleural effusion after spinal separation surgery for patients with spinal metastatic tumors.Methods:A total of 427 patients with spinal metastatic tumors from January 2014 to January 2022 in the Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine were retrospectively analyzed. There were 252 males and 175 females, with an average age of 59±12 years (range, 15-87 years). All patients underwent separation surgery. Based on the chest CT within 1 month after surgery, the volume of pleural effusion was measured individually by reconstruction software. Pleural effusion was defined as small volume (0-500 ml), moderate volume (500-1 000 ml), and large volume (above 1 000 ml). Baseline data and perioperative clinical outcomes were compared between the groups, and indicators with statistically significant differences were included in a binary logistic regression analysis to determine the independent risk factors for the development of pleural effusion after isolation of spinal metastatic cancer. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were conducted to calculate the area under the curve (AUC) for each independent risk factor.Results:All patients successfully completed the operation. Among the 427 patients, there were 35 cases of large pleural effusion, 42 cases of moderate pleural effusion, and 350 cases of small pleural effusion. There were significant differences in tumor size (χ 2=9.485, P=0.013), intraoperative blood loss ( Z=-2.503, P=0.011), blood transfusion ( Z=-2.983, P=0.003), preoperative total protein ( Z=2.681, P=0.007), preoperative albumin ( Z=1.720, P= 0.085), postoperative hemoglobin ( t=2.950, P=0.008), postoperative total protein ( Z=4.192, P<0.001), and postoperative albumin ( t=2.268, P=0.032) in the large pleural effusion group versus the small and moderate pleural effusion group. Logistic regression analysis showed that decreased preoperative albumin ( OR=0.89, P=0.045) and metastases located in the thoracic spine ( OR=4.01, P=0.039) were independent risk factors for the occurrence of large pleural effusion after separation surgery. The ROC curve showed that the AUC and 95% CI for preoperative albumin, lesion location, and the combined model were 0.637 (0.54, 0.74), 0.421 (0.36, 0.48), and 0.883 (0.81, 0.92). The combined predictive model showed good predictive value. Conclusion:The volume of pleural effusion can be measured individually and quantitatively based on chest CT. Decreased preoperative albumin and metastases located in the thoracic spine are independent risk factors for the occurrence of large pleural effusion after separation surgery. The combined prediction of the two factors has better predictive efficacy.
9.Analysis of risk factors for 1-year survival rate in patients with spinal metastasis secondary to lung cancer
Bingshan YAN ; Jingyu ZHANG ; Yancheng LIU ; Xiuchun YU ; Guochuan ZHANG ; Zhaoming YE ; Guowen WANG ; Yu ZHANG ; Yongcheng HU
Chinese Journal of Orthopaedics 2024;44(6):409-418
Objective:To investigate the risk factors for 1-year survival rate in patients with spinal metastasis secondary to lung cancer.Methods:The data of 343 patients with spinal metastases secondary to lung cancer from January 2011 to December 2018 were retrospectively studied. There were 188 males (54.8%) and 155 females (45.2%) with an average age of 59.47±10.21 years old (range 23-91 years). The patients were divided into operation group (150 cases, 43.7%) and non operation group (193 cases, 56.3%). The demographics, types of primary tumor, non spinal metastasis, visceral metastasis, spinal metastasis and segments, pathological fractures of vertebra, Frankel classification, physical function status (Karnofsky performance scale, KPS), visual analogue score (VAS), the spinal instability neoplastic score (SINS) were recorded and analyzed. The impact of different treatments on the survival prognosis of patients with spinal metastasis was evaluated. The independent factors affecting survival in those patients were analyzed by Cox proportional hazards regression model.Results:The peak incidence of spinal metastases was found in the age group of 46-60 years (43.7%, 150/343). 38.5% (132/343) of the patients had pathological fractures of the involved vertebral body. 58.3% (200/343) of the patients had extraspinal bone metastasis. 36.2% (124/343) of the patients had visceral metastasis. Among the primary tumors, adenocarcinoma was the most common tpye (61.5%, 211/343), followed by large cell lung cancer (12.5%, 43/343), small cell lung cancer (6.4%, 22/343), squamous cell cancer (6.1%, 21/343) and mixed cell lung cancer (5.3%, 18/343). The type of lung cancer cells in about 8.2 (28/343) patients was unknown. Among the surgical patients, 21 patients underwent minimally invasive surgery (14.0%), 28 patients underwent simple decompression surgery (18.7%), 76 patients underwent separation surgery (50.7%), and 25 patients underwent radical surgery (16.6%). 59.3% (89/150) of the patients had a better neurological function than before surgery. The average survival time of all patients was 9.88 months with the median survival time of 8 (5,14) months. The survival rates were 62.1% (213/343), 30.0% (103/343), and 3.8% (13/343) at 6, 12, and 24 months, respectively. The average survival time of patients in the operation group was 10.24 months with the median survival time of 9 (5, 15) months, and the average survival time of patients in the non operation group was 9.41 months with the median survival time of 7 (5, 13) months with no significant difference between the groups (χ 2=0.300, P=0.584). Multivariate Cox proportional hazard regression model analysis showed that radiotherapy [ HR=1.913, 95% CI(1.471, 2.488), P<0.001], chemotherapy [ HR=1.313, 95% CI(1.040, 1.658), P=0.022], targeted drug therapy [ HR=1.683, 95% CI(1.221, 2.319), P=0.001], KPS [ HR=1.593, 95% CI(1.140, 2.225), P=0.006] and pathological type (non-small cell lung cancer) were independent factors affecting the 1-year survival rate of patients with spinal metastasis secondary to lung cancer [ HR=0.322, 95% CI(0.225, 0.460), P<0.001] with significant difference. Conclusion:Surgical treatment can improve both the neurological function and general status of patients with spinal metastasis. Treatments of radiotherapy, chemotherapy, and targeted drug therapy can significantly improve 1-year survival rate, while a KPS less than 50 points and a primary lung cancer other than adenocarcinoma were independent risk factors reducing 1-year survival rate.
10.Clinicopathological and molecular diagnostic features of early-onset gastric cancer: a study based on data from a single-center dedicated gastric cancer database
Jingdong LIU ; Botian YE ; Min FU ; Qi ZHANG ; Hao CHEN ; Jie SUN ; Tianyi CAI ; Zhaoming WANG ; Hongyong HE ; Junjie ZHAO ; Haojie LI ; Xuefei WANG ; Yihong SUN
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2023;26(10):963-967
Objective:To clarify the clinicopathological, especially molecular, features of early-onset gastric cancer with the aim of informing analysis of treatment strategies.Methods:In this retrospective case-control study, we examined data from a dedicated gastric cancer database in Zhongshan Hospital affiliated to Fudan University. The original cohort comprised 2506 patients with gastric cancer who had undergone gastrectomy in Zhongshan Hospital Fudan University from July 2020 to October 2021, including 198 with early-onset gastric cancer (aged ≤45 years) and 2,308 with non-early gastric cancer. We used a simple random sampling method to select 396 of the 2,308 patients aged >45 years (ratio of 1:2) as the control group and then compared molecular diagnostic data and clinicopathological features of the two groups.Results:The median age was 39 years in the early-onset gastric cancer group, while 66 years in the control group. The clinicopathological features of early-onset gastric cancer included female predominance (59.1% [117/198] vs. 27.8% [110/396], χ 2=54.816, P<0.001), less comorbidity (32.3% [64/198] vs. 57.1% [226/396], χ 2=32.355, P<0.001), poorer differentiation (93.9% [186/198] vs. 74.5% [295/396], χ 2=30.777, P<0.001) and higher proportion of diffuse type (40.4% [80/198] vs. 15.9% [63/396], χ 2=69.639, P<0.001), distant metastasis (7.1% [14/198] vs. 2.8% [11/396], χ 2=6.034, P=0.014). Regarding treatment, distal gastrectomy was more commonly performed than proximal gastrectomy (55.1% [109/198] vs. 47.0% [186/396], 1.5% [3/198] vs. 8.3% [33/396], χ 2=11.644, P=0.003). Family history of gastric cancer, TNM stage, tumor size, lymph node dissection, nerve invasion, nodes harboring metastases, range of lymph node dissection, digestive tract reconstruction procedure, implementation of laparoscopic surgery, combined resection, and preoperative treatment did not differ significantly between the two groups (all P>0.05). Molecular diagnosis showed there was a smaller percentage of mismatch repair deficiency in the early-onset gastric cancer than in the control group (1.0% [2/198] vs. 10.1% [40/396], χ 2=16.301, P<0.001), and a higher rate of positivity for Claudin 18.2 (77.8% [154/198] vs. 53.0% [210/396], χ 2=5.442, P<0.001). HER-2 and Epstein–Barr virus positivity rates did not differ significantly between the two groups. Conclusion:Early-onset gastric cancer is a distinct type of gastric cancer with a high degree of malignancy, and treatment targeting Claudin 18.2 may be effective.

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